This week I was able to complete the newest book by Houston Baptist University professor Nancy Peacey, Love Thy Body: Answering Hard Questions About Life and Sexuality.
In her typical style, professor Pearcey takes the worldviews of the most hotly debated topics in our society today(Life ethics and sexual ethics) and relegates them in a way that is both understandable, yet still accurately conveys the philosophies behind the issues. She then goes on to argue for why the Christian worldview makes the most sense of the issues themselves(such as the importance and meaning of human life) in a way that doesn't lose the sense of urgency behind many topics.
She takes on each topic in individual chapters, where she then breaks down the topic into a number of sub-sections, each of which is jam-packed with the insight that she carries with her everywhere she goes. Starting with the issue of abortion, she takes on the underlying philosophies of many of the key thinkers on the pro-choice side of the issue; mainly, the sort of "dualism" that drives many arguments in favor of abortion: The fetal being may in fact be human, but not in the sort of sense that we are obligated to care for and protect.
This argument has been articulated by a number of thinkers in a variety of ways(Thinkers like Peter Singer, Michael Tooley, Mary Anne Warren, and others) have all argued that it is certain key functions that will give a human being value that is to be respected by society at large.
However, this view has a number of fatal flaws, the biggest and most apparent Nancy highlights in in her section on the issue: We now have no basis for fundamental human rights, and thus, human equality is a myth for the ash heap of history.
Nancy suggests an alternative that is worthy of consideration: The only grounds for affirming the most famous line from the Declaration of Independence, that "All Men Are Created Equal"(Nevermind if the founders didn't live up to this at all times. If the statement were to be rejected on that ground, we would have no standard to measure the founders life decisions up to) is best rooted in the idea of a Creator. Nancy argues that the Christian story provides not only the best explanation for human value, but for why we know humans are special kinds of beings with value in the first place.
She moves on to other topics in the later sections of the book, in particular, the implications of the sexual revolution in the West. Her chapter on the so-called "hookup culture" is particularly insightful, in that this cultural practice explains many of the biggest problems our society faces today.
Not only does professor Pearcey highlight the pain that "hooking up" for one night stands(having sex with someone that a person is not remotely interested in, other than for sexual interaction) brings to many young people, she goes on to argue for the Biblical worldview of sexual intimacy as having the most meaning when it comes to the question of sex. One segment of the chapter is a particularly insightful one: She gives an overview of the sexual ethic of the ancient Roman culture that the New Testament was written in, including the segments written regarding marriage and romance. In many circles today(Especially modern feminist circles), the Christian ethic as outlined in the New Testament by Paul and others is considered "anti-woman" and repressive.
However, as Nancy highlights, the Roman sexual ethic was not, in any way, "pro-woman", pro-child, or even pro-man. Surveying historical analysis of the time, it is noted that sexual interaction was a form of prestige, and men within society would have many sexual partners, regardless of the approval of their spouses. Women weren't even given a voice that was acceptable by the broader culture(There is a reason why many historians are astounded that the first witnesses in the Gospel accounts to the risen Jesus were women; Crafting a new religion to purposely woo the people would never have included such an embarrassing detail).
Enter in the Christian story. When Paul writes to the New Testament church that husbands should "Love their wives as Christ loves the church, and gave himself up for her"(Ephesians 5:25), he is saying something truly special: The Christian sexual ethic not only calls on men to show love to the women they are married to(Which Roman culture ignored the needs of women), but to love in a way that is self-sacrificing and other-centered. Far from a culture built on legalism, "chastity belts", and fear, the Christian sexual ethic gives the deepest purpose and meaning to the love expressed within a marriage between a husband and wife, by using marriage(and other non-romantic relationships as well) to give humankind a picture of the love behind all of reality: The love of the Creator for His creation.
In conclusion, Nancy's book couldn't be any more timely. With growing cultural tensions, and with subjects like abortion, assisted suicide, sex and homosexuality, and gender identity coming directly into the living rooms of America, there are at least three groups of people who would most benefit from her book:
1. Parents: Many Christian parents are unsure of how to instruct their children in the matters addressed in the book. With Queer Feminist theory(and the worldviews behind it) and explicit sexual material making their way into even elementary age schools, many parents are at a loss of how to give their kids a way to think about the subjects being taught. While this book is most assuredly not appropriate for younger audiences, it can help parents start teaching their children how the Christian worldview makes the most sense of our world, and the issues surrounding us.
2. Christian college students: Unfortunately, many Christian students are woefully unprepared for the constant barrage of worldviews that are thrown at them as soon as they step onto a college campus. From freshman orientation onward, worldviews such as postmodernism, Marxism, secular humanism, and sexual libertarianism are being practically(and, at some schools, even literally) shouted on street corners and from rooftops. When I first attended my school, CSU San Marcos, during the transfer student orientation, several of the women's studies professors encouraged the students to chant "Consent is Hot; Assault is Not" multiple times, and jokingly stated that even having "two or more" sex partners in bed at once was acceptable, as long as everyone agreed to be involved. These kinds of statements can make the task of not only living out one's Christian faith on campus seem daunting, but having a thriving relationship with Christ that is a public witness can seem almost impossible. I would recommend, not only read this book before the school semester starts, but master it. Detailed margin notes, highlights, and unreadable pages from underlining are a must.
3. Pro-life advocates: A popular slogan of the United States Army is to "Train how you'll fight", and pro-life work is no exception. Unfortunately, I have noticed that many pro-life advocates can end up on the "front lines" under-equipped for the worldviews they will encounter when on the streets. This book will change that. Pro-life advocates will be equipped to understand not only the viewpoints of those they will meet who are defending an abortion-choice viewpoint, but also will be ready to respond with grace, truth, and compassion when needed most.
Love Thy Body hits bookstore shelves tomorrow nationwide, and I would argue, this is the most important book for Christians to pick up in the New Year of 2018.
Showing posts with label worldview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label worldview. Show all posts
Monday, January 1, 2018
How The Christian Story Gives Life, Gender, and Sexuality Meaning
Friday, August 17, 2012
Comes Down to a Man: Part 3 of "Why Worldview?" [Jay Watts]
“Comes
down to a man dying on a cross saving the world; Rising from the
dead, doing what He said He would do.” Clay Cross – Saving the
World
The
first two posts - Why Worldview? and Challenge is Unavoidable – are
here and here. Now we move on to arguing part two of my general
thesis. Christians ought to study worldview because our faith is
rationally defensible.
Our
house has massive bookshelves full of beautiful books (as well as
Kindles with a growing library) many of which address the Christian
worldview in some form or another and all focusing on different
important components of our belief. Even the books casting a broader
net establish a different launching point and every author has good
reasons for why they picked their beginning subject. So where do we
begin?
I
made the decision to personalize the issue. When I abandoned atheism
it was not for Christianity but for agnosticism. I didn't begin to
believe in anything in particular but decided that some supernatural
aspect of the universe was worth - at minimum - considering based on the
broad testimony of supernatural events throughout human history. I
probably assumed my agnosticism would be permanent, but it is hard to
remember the details of those beliefs now and would hate to project
convenient ideas back into the past. After a brief and unsatisfying
flirtation with eastern philosophies I turned my attention to
established religions and how they began. And as the quote from the
Clay Cross song above so ably conveys, it comes down to a man.
The origins of religions pretty much come down to the testimony of people in history, and that is
exactly what the first question is. It is a question of history.
Something happened in the past and we are going to try to determine
to the best of our ability what that something was. It is difficult
to do, but the people that say things like “history is impossible
to know” or “history can't be trusted because it is written by
the winners” are applying an unworkable and corrosive skepticism
that will eventually eat up almost everything that we accept as human
knowledge of the past for the sake of avoiding a moments reflection
on subjects they would rather avoid. Certainly our personal biases
effect how we understand history and how we assess the evidence but
as Mike Licona points out in The Resurrection of Jesus: A New Historiographical Approach:
Historians
cannot obtain absolute certainty for many of the reasons that
absolute certainty always eludes us in most areas. The wise person
is rarely hindered by her inability to possess absolute certainty;
instead she acts on probabilities. This is the way we live our
lives, and we have found that this principle appears to work rather
well in leading us to correct assessments. Thus when historians claim
that something occurred, they are saying, “Given the available
data, the best explanation indicates that we are warranted in having
a reasonable degree of certainty that x occurred and that it appears
more certain at the moment than competing hypothesis.”
With that in mind, let's
look at some of the events in history that were foundational to competing religious claims.
Sidhartha
Guatama [403-483 BCE] - a wealthy
young man - becomes consumed with suffering and need for meaning. He
leaves his wife – Yasodhara – on the night of the birth of their
son, whom he names Rahula (shackles or fetters) and wanders for six
years pursuing ascetic Brahmanism. Through intense self sacrifice he almost starves himself to death. Then sitting under a Bo tree in
deep and prolonged meditation he became “awake.”
Mohammed
[570 – 632 CE] took sojourns into the mountains because of his
depression at the idolatrous and wicked ways of Mecca. At about the
age of 40 in a cave on Mt. Hira he met whom he believed to be an angel who told him he was “the messenger of God.” His
first convert was his loyal and devoted wife Khadeja.
Joseph
Smith [1805 – 1844] at 15 in 1820
had his first vision in the woods after growing weary of the
denominational arguments that accompanied a revival in Manchester,
New York. God and Christ encouraged him that all the Christian
denominations were wrong and he would establish the one true faith.
He was later given the location of the gold plates of Mormon by the
angel Moroni (Mormon's son). Nineteen
people claim to have seen the book, eight of them declaring by
affidavit to have touched the book. The book
was written in a language called reformed Egyptian and could only be
read with special glasses provided by the angel to Joseph Smith. The
book told of a story of a lost tribe of Israel that came to America
and who was later visited by the resurrected Christ. When the
original translation was lost because the wife of one of Smith's early
followers destroyed it out of anger at her husband,
Joseph Smith recreated it through the use of seeing stones and a hat
and published The Book of Mormon in 1830.
Jesus
of Nazareth - after
reportedly
predicting
his death and promising to deliver a sign of his authentic nature as
the only begotten Son of God - was crucified by the Romans at the
request of the Temple Priests. Days later his tomb is found empty
and his followers – more than 500 of them - claim to see him alive
in a resurrected body. This event confirms the truth of Jesus' claims for his followers and begins the gospel accounts of Jesus' ability
to forgive sins and secure eternal salvation and a future
resurrection for all who believe.
[For
reasons I don't care to fully go into at this point I choose not to
enter into a discussion about Moses as the central historical figure
of Judaism, the deliverance of the Israelites from Egypt, and the
receiving of the 10 Commandments. Mostly because so many different
faith traditions accept the story of Moses.]
There
ought to be something immediately obvious to us all. One of these
events is not like the others. The foundational events of the
Muslim, Mormon, and Buddhist belief systems are different than the
foundational event of Christianity. The former three hinge on the
personal enlightenment and vision of an individual while the latter
focuses on a public event that according to Paul in chapter 15 of 1 Corinthians can be testified to by more than 500 people. This proves
little, but it does change how we approach the stories and what we
can hope to know from our vantage point.
I
looked at all of these testimonies and asked a few questions about
them. It isn't productive to presume dishonesty in any of them at
the outset as that would only lead me back to the Humean skepticism
that previously dominated my life. So lets say for the sake of
argument we grant that Buddha, Jesus, Mohammed, and Joseph Smith all
absolutely believed what they claimed. Are there plausible explanations
for the events in question other than deception?
It
seemed obvious to me that people spending a lot of time alone in
emotional upheaval in possibly harsh elements or conditions (caves,
starving under a tree, wandering in the woods of New York) could
easily have had visions that are explainable in ways beyond assuming
that it was actual supernatural intervention or divine enlightenment. The
golden manuscript introduces a new element since others claimed to
have seen it, so we are now forced to ask the unpleasant question.
Is it reasonable to believe that Joseph Smith intentionally
manufactured a “golden book” of some sort to strengthen his
story? Is it possible that he deceived people? Is it more probable
that he did so than it is that an angel gave him a book that only he
could read? Unfortunately his past behavior opens him up to
reasonable questions concerning his willingness and ability to
deceive people on issues of supernatural knowledge.
But
what about the resurrection of Jesus? How do we assess it? It isn't
like the other claims. The skeptic may plead that Jesus wandered in
the wilderness starving for 40 days where he claims he was tempted by
the devil and came to understand who he was. How is that different
from the other guys? Here we must be clear that the foundational
event of Christianity is the resurrection. It is not the virgin
birth or the temptation of Jesus in the wilderness. Paul writes
about the resurrection in 1 Corinthians 15 as the central event of
our faith without which we are fools to be pitied. However
charismatic and earnest Jesus may have seemed, he did not convince
his followers of his identity based on the testimony of his
temptation or the circumstances of his conception. They testified in
their own words in historically accepted documents that they rallied
around and preached the resurrection event to the world as the
confirmation that God's grace was delivered through the only begotten
Son of the Father, Jesus of Nazareth.
Christianity
begins at the resurrection and so does our recognition of the
rational foundation of our faith. We can counter the argument that all
religious claims are the same at the very first consideration of our
beliefs. The reported resurrection of Jesus offers us the
opportunity to examine the central event of the Christian faith in a
manner not open to other foundational events. Because of this
difference, scholars like William Lane Craig, Gary Habermas, Mike
Licona, and N.T. Wright (among others) have been able to contribute
to a tradition of resurrection literature that challenges the
competing hypotheses through investigating broadly accepted
historical facts as opposed to defending the personal enlightenment
of a historical figure in their most private moments.
A
brief examination - or as brief as I am capable - of some of those historical resurrection arguments will be the subject of
the next post.
Wednesday, August 8, 2012
Challenge is Unavoidable: Part 2 of "Why Worldview?" [Jay Watts]
My friend found me on campus after his
first political science class. He told me his professor began the
first day saying, “There is nothing in the world I hate more than
young, white, Republican, Christian men. If you are one of those you
are going to have a tough time this quarter.” My friend was all of
those.
Earlier in my college career I sat in a
world history class where the professor cooly explained that any
Christians in the room would learn over the course of our studies
that what they have been taught is history is in fact a lie. At the
time I was an atheist and couldn't care less if our subject matter
bothered Christians, but I remember looking over the syllabus and not
seeing anything in our class outline directly related to Christian
history or even tangentially relevant. Why was this professor
talking about that?
In a performance art class we took an
instruction period to watch a supremely intellectual show like Ricky
Lake or Phil Donahue – which talk show it was escapes me now –
where the format pitted homosexuals against ministers from black
churches that identified homosexual behavior as sin. After a
particularly bad exchange between the two parties our professor
stopped the tape and asked the class, “What do you all think about
that?” You can imagine that a performance class instructed by an
openly gay professor had some rather harsh criticism for the
Christians on the show, but they saved their most intense attacks for
the two Christian students in the class who attempted to defend the
ministers. In short time, only one was left defending the ministers
as the other crumbled under the pressure.
Those are just three stories
demonstrating the challenges that await Christians on college
campuses. Notice that you had three different subject matters with
professors all intentionally bringing their class focus to a direct
criticism of Christian beliefs. Whether it was in theater classes,
journalism classes, business and professional speaking, or world lit
every class offered challenges to the foundational beliefs that
Christians bring into the university with them. Obviously some of
the professors – like that political science teacher – were more
direct than others, but the consistent thread of college life was
challenge. This may surprise you, but I think that is to be
expected.
This is not some dire warning about
evil universities. I went into college an atheist and came out a
Christian. My friends that most enjoyed the class with the
previously mentioned political science professor were the objects of
his initial rant. When push came to shove, they enjoyed an
environment that demanded they learn to defend their views. The
professor most influential on me was as politically liberal as anyone
I met on campus. He was also a good man who cared about his
students. One very politically liberal professor I met after my
conversion helped me to reevaluate the importance of entertainment
that builds community rather than tearing it down even as she
recognized that we both had different ideas about what we would like
to build towards. If you are prepared, the challenge of college life
can give you the chance to reach out to more people than you can
imagine.
Scott and I recently worked with the
leadership of Students for Life of America. We trained and talked to
some of the brightest and most committed young people I have ever had
the pleasure of meeting. The purpose of their meeting was to equip
their leadership to not only withstand the challenge of university
life but to challenge right back as it pertains to the sanctity of
human life. They know that intelligent and committed students can
make a difference on college campuses and rather than shying away
they are preparing to engage.
We only have two options. Withdraw or
engage. Well if you have seen Battle: Los Angeles or are familiar
with the motto of the 2nd Battalion 5th Marines
then you can guess how I feel about retreating. To quote –
and look away if salty language bothers you - “Retreat? Hell we
just got here!” That quote is attributed to Marine Captain Lloyd
W. Williams when a French officer advised his battalion to pull back
at the Battle of Belleau Wood in June of 1918 in World War I. He did
not survive the battle but “Retreat Hell” permanently became the
motto of 2/5. When I meet the passionate and engaging students on
college campuses organizing events and encouraging dialogue or when I
talk to skeptical students willing to listen to reasoned argument and
reconsider their views I am inspired. We don't need to pull back we
need to train more people to engage effectively.
Besides complete retreat doesn't work.
I once heard J. P. Moreland give a presentation about when
evangelical and fundamentalist Christians pulled out of universities
to open Christian schools in response to the rapid secularization of
the major university environment. Ronald Numbers - an agnostic - similarly discusses
a retreat in his book The Creationists where he relays that after
failing to defeat Darwinism and the perceived attack it represented
on traditional Christian beliefs in the academic world:
“rather than surrendering, they
turned their energies toward developing a separate institutional base
from which to evangelize the world... despairing of ever converting
the scientific community to their way of thinking, they set about to
create their own societies and journals.” (Chapter 6)
What was the result? Well we left the
campuses entirely to those we most radically disagree with and in the
absence of challenge a worldview developed unchecked that we are only
now seeing fully expressed in our society. That is not to say that
there is not a legitimate place for Bible institutes, Christian
universities, and Christian academic journals but their must also be
a concerted effort to prepare the young men and women that are going
to public and secular universities to think critically and understand
their own worldview. Circling the wagons and disengaging not only
hurts the campuses that need well prepared Christians within their
communities but it also allows ideas that need to be shed - that would
not survive critical inspection - to be exposed. We all need that or
else we never grow.
Challenge is unavoidable. Parents tell
me their middle schoolers already have little outspoken atheist
friends. In my church, I have had more than one occasion when lay
teachers were saying something that they were completely unaware is contrary to traditional Christian doctrine. In one class at church I
had the bizarre experience of defending evolutionary theory from
straw man attacks. As the class grew ever more frustrated with me, I
insisted that nothing good could come from their preparing to engage
a view of evolutionary theory that doesn't exist or in convincing
themselves that people that believe in Darwinian evolution are
stupid. They would be sorely disappointed and embarrassed when they
met an actual defender of actual evolutionary arguments and they
realized they were not ready for this conversation. At work - both
in secular business and in ministry – my beliefs were and are
routinely challenged by coworkers. And this doesn't even get into
the daily challenge my kids put to our beliefs. Why? Why? Why? Why?
It never ends.
Since challenge cannot be skirted then
the proper response is to be ready for challenge. We must instill in
ourselves and our children the value of studying our beliefs and
being prepared to articulate those beliefs to those who question us.
As the oft quoted 1 Peter 3:15 commands: “But in your hearts revere
Christ as Lord. Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who
asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this
with gentleness and respect” To be certain, we may have to watch a
little less TV. It may require we sacrifice some of what we call
“free time” or “me time” or “down time.” It most
certainly will require that we read and interact with literature that
forces us out of our comfort zone and may put at risk cherished
personal beliefs that cannot withstand scrutiny.
I tell every group that I work with
that no one – not one single person – ever left Christianity
because it was proven false. They either left for emotional reasons
as opposed to intellectual reasons or – as Bill Craig says- because
some belief within Christianity was strongly challenged and though it
wasn't foundational to our faith it held an unnecessary level of
importance in their personal understanding of Christianity. I have
found that a proper and basic understanding of the foundations of
Christianity and the evidences and basis for those beliefs
establishes a faith that is strengthened by challenge.
In my next post I will start to talk
about some of those foundational beliefs.
Thursday, August 2, 2012
Why Christian Worldview Training? [Jay Watts]
Scott taught me to ask a diagnostic
question early in my conversations on campus. A student engages me
in a conversation about the pro-life argument and I say, “Do you
think it would be wrong for someone to kill you? Do you think
unjustly taking your life would be objectively wrong and it would be
right to punish the person who did so?”
The overwhelming majority of people
answer yes. This means they believe (1) in objective moral values,
duties, and accountability and (2) that it is wrong to unjustly kill
human beings. They reject the idea that it is perfectly acceptable to kill
human beings like them. They simply fail to see or understand how
unborn human life – fetal or embryonic – can be considered like
them in morally important ways. Our argument then focuses on making
a scientific and philosophical case that fetal and embryonic human beings are valuable
human lives in the same way the rest of us are.
But what if they say, “No, I don't
think it is objectively wrong to kill me.” What then? Do we just
wring our hands and move on to an easier and less weird objector? We
can't start making the case for life using science and philosophy
just yet because they appear to reject certain important facets of
that argument. What we have encountered is an entirely different
worldview and that requires a step back.
I once was a pro-choice atheist that
rejected the existence of objective morality. What changed my views?
I tell every group that I work with that I was won over by good
arguments from good arguers. Both of those elements are crucial to
success. There was no shortage of judgmental and harsh Christians
willing to condemn me, but thoughtful caring arguers were scarce. I
was not pleasant by any stretch of the imagination - such was my
distaste for the religious folks I knew - but they claimed to
represent some all powerful benevolent force that loved all. I just
thought we were all autonomous jerks in our own right.
How many Christians were able to get
past the nasty assault and draw me into an actual conversation? One.
That precious and disciplined young lady made it possible for me to
change by making room for me in a discussion that was respectful and
cordial even while centered on profound disagreements. She didn't
change my mind while we talked, but she certainly put what Greg Koukl
calls a stone in my shoe. It was nearly a year later and she was
nowhere in sight when the full weight of her work and arguments came
to bear on me. She was not present for the change, but she helped make it happen.
Lately I am giving more and more presentations on the Christian worldview. I passionately believe that in order to engage
objectors it is vital that we understand what we
believe first and how our worldview comes to bear on the topic at
hand. When we appropriately grasp our own beliefs we will more
clearly see the areas of disagreement and help our detractors
better see them as well.
My initial worldview
presentation is not an exhaustive discussion of what everyone who
disagrees with us believes. Such a talk would be a monstrosity of
overkill anyway. It is too much to take on effectively and – more
importantly – most audiences I talk to aren't truly convinced worldview
study matters to them. So I focus on a few foundational beliefs of
the Christian worldview while touching on how those beliefs differ
from others.
How does the resurrection differ from
the experiences of Joseph Smith, Mohammed, and Buddha while answering the claims that Christianity is based on a myth? How does
Trinitarian Monotheism impact the argument that we all worship the
same God so what difference does it make? How does an all powerful
eternal being reveal himself to us and how does that answer the claim
the bible is just a book like any other? What do we mean when we say
that we are God's image bearers and how does that impact our
understanding of consciousness, objective morality, and our place in
the animal world?
These are the very basics of our belief, but the better we grasp these basics the better equipped we are to engage people who misunderstand us. Christians ought
to study their worldview because they will be challenged on it, it is
rationally defensible, and there are people that need good
arguers with good arguments in order to reach them with the grace of
Jesus Christ.
My next three posts will draw out those
last three points.
Monday, March 12, 2012
Challenging and Enjoyable: Apologetics Done Right [Jay Watts]
Imagine you are talking to a young man and he tells you he runs a program for middle schoolers and high schoolers. It is an athletic program that aims to prepare young people for the athletic challenges they will face later in life.
“So do you spend a lot of time on intensive training?” you ask.
“Not really. We find that kids don't care for training. So we focus our efforts on relational games and making it fun for them. Otherwise it is really hard to get the kids to show up.”
This shocks you a bit. “Wow. How do you balance the playing with preparing them for the future challenges?”
He thinks for a moment and answers, “Well, we hope that they will just associate our training with fun and later on when times get tough they will at least remember the training as a good time. There are so many interests competing for their time, we just can't afford to lose them to other things they will enjoy more.”
“Does this strategy work?”
He sheepishly shrugs and admits, “Well, when they get in competition we see anywhere from a 60 to 85% failure rate. They abandon athletics altogether though some, maybe as many as half, come back to athletics later in life.”
Stunned you respond, “I don't understand. You say your job is to prepare them for future trials in athletics but your methods fail miserably. You don't even seem to be focused on preparing them for athletics at all. You seem to target pleasing them and having a good time. Although that may be fun in the short term, you admit that the long term benefits of this approach are abysmal. Not only are the kids not succeeding in athletics but they are becoming so disillusioned by defeat that they give up athletics completely!”
If you had this conversation with a coach it would be so clear to you that something was radically wrong with the approach that this guy is taking. And yet, this is exactly the scenario that we see in many church youth groups and exactly the failure rate we see with young men and women abandoning their faith in college. Many youth leaders share with me their frustration as they struggle to inject meaningful lessons into a system that has a main goal of encouraging attendance in uncommitted kids. “We have to make it fun or they won't come,” one youth minister told me. Another said, “If I focused on things like doctrine and apologetics I wouldn't have a youth department.”
At recent events in Tennessee, Rhode Island, Georgia, and Florida parents told me stories about their children going to college and losing their faith. These parents are heartbroken and struggling to find a way to talk to their kids. Certainly some of this is simply the rebellious nature of young people at this age, but there is an underlying intellectual arrogance that these children exhibit towards their parents. Their sons and daughters dismiss their previous beliefs as silly superstitions and the faith of their parents as ignorant. Concerned fathers and mothers repeat this same story over and over again.
What is the answer? How do we respond to this challenge? Do we continue to focus on entertaining kids in our youth groups so that they will feel comfortable and keep coming back, or do we focus on doctrine and apologetics in order to prepare them to stand up to future challenges? How about earnestly trying to do both?
We must minister to the whole person, so we can't discount the importance of social dynamics in reaching kids. It is also important to engage youth with lessons in such a way that - as much as it is possible - they enjoy learning and grasp why what they are learning matters to them. One of my greatest obstacles in talking to youth leaders about apologetics is convincing them that good organizations are aware of their challenges and will work with them to accomplish these goals while equipping young Christians to engage the culture.

Summit Ministries has a rigorous two week program where older high schoolers and college students spend time with some of today's best Christian speakers training them in various topics. In addition, they spend time socializing with other Christian students in a safe environment. Summit provides materials for study beyond their on campus programs to help parents work with their families in communicating the intellectual grounding of the Christian beliefs to the next generation. John Stonestreet and the Summit team work tirelessly to provide the highest quality materials and presentations available.
Stand to Reason's Brett Kunkle helped devise a unique mission trip idea where groups of young Christians are taken to places like Cal Berkeley in order to hear about competing views straight from the source. Students hear from atheist philosophers about how they ground objective moral values without an appeal to God or about the sufficiency of evolution in explaining the full human experience including free will. Rather than shelter kids from intellectual questions, Brett takes them out to engage them and allow the students the chance to process the information and share with Brett and the other leaders what they are thinking.
Jonathan Morrow of Think Christianly has devoted his considerable talents to helping young people and ministers see the importance of “a mature faith, a transformed heart, and a radical love for our world.” To this end he has written multiple books including Welcome to College, a tremendous resource for high schoolers preparing to leave home for life at a university, and Think Christianly, a book I sincerely believe should be read by all people working in ministry today. Jonathan's cultivates a heart for God through a rigorous and intellectually satisfying faith by honestly looking at the challenges in our culture and finding ways to minister to the secular world rather than abandon it outright.
Apologetics and worldview training does not have to be stale or boring. At LTI, it is required by Scott that our speakers be capable of reaching the audience and holding their attention. The number one remark I most often hear when I am done is how much people enjoy the presentations. They say that they obviously learned but they were surprised how exciting the seminar was, and some of these seminars last 2 – 3 hours. People routinely say, “I have to tell my friends what they missed so if you ever come back to this area again they will come.” The biggest obstacle we face is getting the initial invitations to come. Wherever we go, being invited back is the norm. Youth leaders, school administrators, and pastors are excited to see their congregations energized by subjects they feared would bore them to death or – even worse – make them angry. I encourage my audiences by telling them that the reason this former atheist is now dedicated to teaching the value of human life and the truth of the Christian worldview is primarily good arguments by good arguers. Anyone willing to train to engage can make a difference.
These are just a few of the people I know that are working with Christian leaders to teach the next generation what they need to know to face the future. Church leaders can be confident the help these organizations offer will not stupefy their students into slack jawed boredom. It is our job to help you do your job. We can help parents talk to their kids, youth leaders teach their students, and pastors inform their congregations. That is our part in the body of Christ and we are limited in our capacity to do our job until others see the need and value in what we do.
“So do you spend a lot of time on intensive training?” you ask.
“Not really. We find that kids don't care for training. So we focus our efforts on relational games and making it fun for them. Otherwise it is really hard to get the kids to show up.”
This shocks you a bit. “Wow. How do you balance the playing with preparing them for the future challenges?”
He thinks for a moment and answers, “Well, we hope that they will just associate our training with fun and later on when times get tough they will at least remember the training as a good time. There are so many interests competing for their time, we just can't afford to lose them to other things they will enjoy more.”
“Does this strategy work?”
He sheepishly shrugs and admits, “Well, when they get in competition we see anywhere from a 60 to 85% failure rate. They abandon athletics altogether though some, maybe as many as half, come back to athletics later in life.”
Stunned you respond, “I don't understand. You say your job is to prepare them for future trials in athletics but your methods fail miserably. You don't even seem to be focused on preparing them for athletics at all. You seem to target pleasing them and having a good time. Although that may be fun in the short term, you admit that the long term benefits of this approach are abysmal. Not only are the kids not succeeding in athletics but they are becoming so disillusioned by defeat that they give up athletics completely!”
If you had this conversation with a coach it would be so clear to you that something was radically wrong with the approach that this guy is taking. And yet, this is exactly the scenario that we see in many church youth groups and exactly the failure rate we see with young men and women abandoning their faith in college. Many youth leaders share with me their frustration as they struggle to inject meaningful lessons into a system that has a main goal of encouraging attendance in uncommitted kids. “We have to make it fun or they won't come,” one youth minister told me. Another said, “If I focused on things like doctrine and apologetics I wouldn't have a youth department.”
At recent events in Tennessee, Rhode Island, Georgia, and Florida parents told me stories about their children going to college and losing their faith. These parents are heartbroken and struggling to find a way to talk to their kids. Certainly some of this is simply the rebellious nature of young people at this age, but there is an underlying intellectual arrogance that these children exhibit towards their parents. Their sons and daughters dismiss their previous beliefs as silly superstitions and the faith of their parents as ignorant. Concerned fathers and mothers repeat this same story over and over again.
What is the answer? How do we respond to this challenge? Do we continue to focus on entertaining kids in our youth groups so that they will feel comfortable and keep coming back, or do we focus on doctrine and apologetics in order to prepare them to stand up to future challenges? How about earnestly trying to do both?
We must minister to the whole person, so we can't discount the importance of social dynamics in reaching kids. It is also important to engage youth with lessons in such a way that - as much as it is possible - they enjoy learning and grasp why what they are learning matters to them. One of my greatest obstacles in talking to youth leaders about apologetics is convincing them that good organizations are aware of their challenges and will work with them to accomplish these goals while equipping young Christians to engage the culture.
Summit Ministries has a rigorous two week program where older high schoolers and college students spend time with some of today's best Christian speakers training them in various topics. In addition, they spend time socializing with other Christian students in a safe environment. Summit provides materials for study beyond their on campus programs to help parents work with their families in communicating the intellectual grounding of the Christian beliefs to the next generation. John Stonestreet and the Summit team work tirelessly to provide the highest quality materials and presentations available.
Stand to Reason's Brett Kunkle helped devise a unique mission trip idea where groups of young Christians are taken to places like Cal Berkeley in order to hear about competing views straight from the source. Students hear from atheist philosophers about how they ground objective moral values without an appeal to God or about the sufficiency of evolution in explaining the full human experience including free will. Rather than shelter kids from intellectual questions, Brett takes them out to engage them and allow the students the chance to process the information and share with Brett and the other leaders what they are thinking.
Jonathan Morrow of Think Christianly has devoted his considerable talents to helping young people and ministers see the importance of “a mature faith, a transformed heart, and a radical love for our world.” To this end he has written multiple books including Welcome to College, a tremendous resource for high schoolers preparing to leave home for life at a university, and Think Christianly, a book I sincerely believe should be read by all people working in ministry today. Jonathan's cultivates a heart for God through a rigorous and intellectually satisfying faith by honestly looking at the challenges in our culture and finding ways to minister to the secular world rather than abandon it outright.Apologetics and worldview training does not have to be stale or boring. At LTI, it is required by Scott that our speakers be capable of reaching the audience and holding their attention. The number one remark I most often hear when I am done is how much people enjoy the presentations. They say that they obviously learned but they were surprised how exciting the seminar was, and some of these seminars last 2 – 3 hours. People routinely say, “I have to tell my friends what they missed so if you ever come back to this area again they will come.” The biggest obstacle we face is getting the initial invitations to come. Wherever we go, being invited back is the norm. Youth leaders, school administrators, and pastors are excited to see their congregations energized by subjects they feared would bore them to death or – even worse – make them angry. I encourage my audiences by telling them that the reason this former atheist is now dedicated to teaching the value of human life and the truth of the Christian worldview is primarily good arguments by good arguers. Anyone willing to train to engage can make a difference.
These are just a few of the people I know that are working with Christian leaders to teach the next generation what they need to know to face the future. Church leaders can be confident the help these organizations offer will not stupefy their students into slack jawed boredom. It is our job to help you do your job. We can help parents talk to their kids, youth leaders teach their students, and pastors inform their congregations. That is our part in the body of Christ and we are limited in our capacity to do our job until others see the need and value in what we do.
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Get This Book [Scott]
Now that the banquet and school talks are done for the year, I've turned to catching up on reading.
At the top of my stack is Jonathan Morrow's Think Christianly: Looking at the Intersection of Faith and Culture.
The thing I love about Jonathan is his gift of translating. He takes weighty (and sometimes complicated) philosophical challenges to the faith and answers them in language lay people can understand. Yet--and here is the best part--he does it without talking down to educated readers. That's what set apart his excellent book Welcome to College and it's also what makes his current book shine.
Topics include (to name just a few):
--Thinking Christianly about all of life
--Cultivating a thoughtful faith
--Becoming like the Jesus the world needs
--Truth, tolerance, and relativism
--Christianity in the public square
--Bioethics in the 21st Century
--Questions of faith and science
--Rediscovering God's design for sex
I'll post a full review later. But for now, don't wait to benefit from Jonathan's contribution to the defense of the faith.
At the top of my stack is Jonathan Morrow's Think Christianly: Looking at the Intersection of Faith and Culture.
The thing I love about Jonathan is his gift of translating. He takes weighty (and sometimes complicated) philosophical challenges to the faith and answers them in language lay people can understand. Yet--and here is the best part--he does it without talking down to educated readers. That's what set apart his excellent book Welcome to College and it's also what makes his current book shine.
Topics include (to name just a few):
--Thinking Christianly about all of life
--Cultivating a thoughtful faith
--Becoming like the Jesus the world needs
--Truth, tolerance, and relativism
--Christianity in the public square
--Bioethics in the 21st Century
--Questions of faith and science
--Rediscovering God's design for sex
I'll post a full review later. But for now, don't wait to benefit from Jonathan's contribution to the defense of the faith.
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